Abstract

Flavonoids (polyphenols) are an important class of dietary antioxidants largely distributed in plants. In spite of their very fast reaction with lipid peroxyl radicals, flavonoids are relatively modest inhibitors of lipid peroxidation in solution. In addition, the absence of lag phase and the strong dependence of the antioxidant efficiency (the ratio of the rate constant of chain break to the rate constant of chain propagation) on the antioxidant concentration both point to a nonclassic behaviour. The inhibition of linoleic acid peroxidation by quercetin (3,3′,4′,5,7-pentahydroxyflavone) and its 3-O-glycoside rutin (two ubiquitous dietary flavonoids and potent antioxidants) has been investigated by UV–visible spectroscopy in pH 7.4 micellar solutions of SDS at 37 °C. The chain-breaking antioxidant α-tocopherol and two synthetic amphiphilic quercetin ethers are also considered for comparison purposes. From the general mathematical treatment developed in this work, flavonoids appear as strong chain-breaking antioxidants whose overall antiperoxidizing activity is, however, strongly restricted by the chain-initiating activity of the flavonoid radicals formed during inhibition (prooxidant effect).

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